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Seconded...yawn...Hoamm...what's next ?
The compression is closer to 10:1, not 36:1 just to clear that one up. A 4K 16:9 TIFF is around 27MB (at least the frame that I just grabbed and output was). That would make the uncompressed RAW file around 9MB. If you are recording in RC28 at around 28MB/sec, that would give you slightly more than 1MB per frame at 24fps. So the compression is from 9MB to 1MB. Even at the 36MB/frame that he mentions, that would still be only 12:1 compression. He clearly doesn't understand RAW Bayer Filtered sensor technology. Is my math wrong here Jarred or Stuart?
This was a nice comical read with my morning coffee...
And Rian Johnson is indeed a real and influential person--which is why myself and others (e.g., Graeme Nattress and other Red staff) take the time to respond to his article.
From reading various blogs, I get the idea that Hollywood pros are not all that sold on RED. Peter Jackson made a short for Jim, for testing the camera. Soderberg made two movies with RED. But the technical quality was poor. They got awards but nobody bought it for distribution.
No other major director seems to be interested in using RED.
Some B movies have been made with RED.
More movies have been made with other 4K cameras.
So, RED cannot claim infallibility or superiority, based on popularity among Hollywood Pros.
I dont know what the poor director was doing wrong,
but for sure he doesnt understand todays image acquisition technology, and he also has difficulties reading -the red has 4900, not 4096 photosites, of which 4520 are used to debayer an image.
Furthermore in his compression calculations he is misplacing CMOS RAW and RGB - pretty incompetent for 2008, as these technology is common in photography since 2002.
The images a competent director/dp/post team can produce with red are simply awesome.
Soderberg made two movies with RED. But the technical quality was poor. They got awards but nobody bought it for distribution.
From checking the features, I find the only advantage for RED is its price. It is the cheapest.
Which cameras that would be?More movies have been made with other 4K cameras.
The director of Sony USA has said Sony will soon release a 4K camera (may be in 2009 NAB). Panasonic product manager has hinted about the possibility if bringing out a 4K camera.
ARRI employee refused to putout a rumor that ARRI is working on a 4K version of D21.
Panavision is rumored to be working on an 8K camera.
It looks like within next two years RED will have a lot of competition.
But we should also extend that to say a competent director/dp/post team that has been properly trained. This has been my biggest stumbling block in dealing with clients who try to use my gear or do the post work on RED footage. It's not complicated, but it usually takes someone to hold their hand and walk them through proper "developing" of the RAW files to get the desired results. In fact, I almost lost a good client over a RED shoot just recently. They wanted to handle post and they got lost along the way, almost ended our business relationship until I finally got the producer to look at an email with some stills from the shoot that I exported and corrected. In the end, I had to go in and train a few of their post guys on how to get the images out to DPX and looking nice. One of their post team was a very experienced colorist too, with lots of time on Quantel and with access to Lustre. For that particular job, the post team just wasn't understanding the notes from myself and the DP about the lighting issues and white balance for post. White balance metadata was FUBAR because the RED-newbie DP kept bumping button #1 for auto-WB -- this was under Build 15.